
(Bloomberg) -- Lucid Motors Inc. is in talks with Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund to build an electric vehicle factory potentially near the Red Sea city of Jeddah, according to people familiar with the matter.
The move would mark a significant expansion for Newark, California-based Lucid. Saudi Arabia is trying to become a Middle Eastern hub for manufacturing EVs as it diversifies its economy from oil.
The $360 billion Public Investment Fund, already a shareholder in Lucid, will provide much of the money for the site at the King Abdullah Economic City, the people said, asking not be named because the discussions are private. Plans are advanced but could change, the people said. PIF and Lucid have also considered Neom, a new city being developed in the northwest of Saudi Arabia, as a possible site for the plant.
Lucid is one of a several U.S. firms seeking to take on Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc. The startup is targeting the luxury end of the EV market and its chief executive officer, Peter Rawlinson, was previously Tesla’s chief engineer on the Model S sedan.
Lucid raised more than $1 billion from the PIF in 2018, an investment that was conditional on the firm developing a site in Saudi Arabia, the people said. King Abdullah Economic City is about 60 miles (97 kilometers) north of Jeddah, the country’s second-biggest city.
Since then, Lucid has unveiled plans for the Air, a $169,000 sedan it says is capable of being driven more than 500 miles (805 kilometers) on a single charge. It has also built a factory in the Arizona desert and deliveries to U.S. customers of the model are expected to start in the second quarter.
Read More: Electric Cars Are About to Start Rolling From the Arizona Desert
Lucid plans to produce a cheaper $75,000 version of its sedan in 2022, which will be able to travel more than 400 miles on a single charge, and build SUVs eventually.
The PIF is set to play a major role in Saudi development projects over the next few years as the government looks to cut spending and keep the budget deficit in check after oil’s coronavirus-triggered rout. Yasir Al Rumayyan, governor of the fund, said it will spend at least $40 billion locally this year and in 2022.
Just five years ago it was a sleepy organization with less than 100 employees. It now has 1,000 staff and ambitions to raise its assets to more than $2.5 trillion, according to Al Rumayyan. The PIF also invested in Tesla, before selling almost all its shares in early 2020.
Últimas Noticias
Debanhi Escobar: they secured the motel where she was found lifeless in a cistern
Members of the Specialized Prosecutor's Office in Nuevo León secured the Nueva Castilla Motel as part of the investigations into the case

The oldest person in the world died at the age of 119
Kane Tanaka lived in Japan. She was born six months earlier than George Orwell, the same year that the Wright brothers first flew, and Marie Curie became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize

Macabre find in CDMX: they left a body bagged and tied in a taxi
The body was left in the back seats of the car. It was covered with black bags and tied with industrial tape
The eagles of America will face Manchester City in a duel of legends. Here are the details
The top Mexican football champion will play a match with Pep Guardiola's squad in the Lone Star Cup

Why is it good to bring dogs out to know the world when they are puppies
A so-called protection against the spread of diseases threatens the integral development of dogs
